She is a chief scientist for the IBM Research Almaden Laboratory in San Jose, California, where she has led groups developing cognitive assistants for radiologists and cardiologists, assistive technology for people with memory impairments, and biologically inspired storage media.
[1] Syeda-Mahmood was home-schooled, and then skipped two grades after entering primary school in India.
[2] She went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for doctoral study, funded by an IBM graduate fellowship; her early projects there included a 1988 prototype robotic vacuum cleaner.
[2] After completing her Ph.D. at MIT in 1993, under the supervision of Eric Grimson,[3] she worked for Xerox at their Webster Research Center, on content-based image retrieval, before moving to IBM in 1998.
[1] In 2020 she was inducted into the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering College of Fellows, "for outstanding technical achievement and leadership in multimodal imaging decision support with lasting impact to academia/industry in healthcare AI".